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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "low-priced" in a sentence

    low-priced example sentences

    low-priced


    1. As Bill tells it, his first prerequisite was that the car be midsized, low-priced and of a subdued coloration, in this case black


    2. He did not expect that such a fine house with so many wonderful qualities would be so low-priced


    3. Don’t be scared off by low-priced products if they offer a good % commission -- the lower dollar value per sale is offset by the higher sales volume


    4. Low-priced stocks, indictors based on volume of


    5. In such cases, the low-priced bond or preferred stock stands virtually in the position of a common stock and should be regarded as such for purposes of analysis


    6. For example, should a 7% preferred stock selling at 30 be considered a low-priced senior issue or as the equivalent of a common stock? The answer to this question will depend partly on the exhibit of the company and partly on the attitude of the prospective buyer


    7. The purchaser of low-priced bonds is fully aware of the risk he is running; he is more likely to make a thorough investigation of the issue and to appraise carefully the chances of loss and of profit; finally—most important of all—he is prepared for whatever losses he may sustain, and his profits are in a form available to meet his losses


    8. It was the authors who said, “If we assume that a fairly large proportion of a group of carefully selected low-priced bonds will escape default, the income received on the group as a whole over a period of time will undoubtedly far exceed the dividend return on similarly priced common stocks


    9. This is because low-priced shares are apt to fluctuate over a wider range percentagewise than higher priced stocks


    10. Limitation of Profit on Low-priced Bonds Not a Real Drawback

    11. Furthermore, the limitations of principal profit in the case of a low-priced bond, as compared with a common stock, may be of only minor practical importance, because the profit actually realized by the common-stock buyer is ordinarily no greater than that obtainable from a speculative senior security


    12. , “Does the smaller risk of loss involved in this low-priced bond, as compared with a common stock, compensate for the smaller possibilities of profit?” The nearer a bond comes to meeting investment requirements—and the closer it sells to an investment price—the more likely are those interested to regard it from the investment viewpoint


    13. Low-priced Bonds Associated with Corporate Weakness


    14. A more emphatic objection is made against low-priced bonds and preferred stocks on the ground that they are associated with corporate weakness, retrogression, or depression


    15. If we assume that a fairly large proportion of a group of carefully selected low-priced bonds will escape default, the income received on the group as a whole over a period of time will undoubtedly far exceed the dividend return on similarly priced common stocks


    16. Where a low-priced bond is covered several times over by net current assets, it presents a special type of opportunity, because experience shows that the chances of repayment are good, even though the earnings may be poor or irregular


    17. EXAMPLES OF LOW-PRICED INDUSTRIAL BONDS COVERED BY NET CURRENT ASSETS, 1932*


    18. The characteristics discussed in the preceding chapter are generally thought of by the public in connection with low-priced stocks


    19. The majority of issues of the speculatively capitalized type do sell within the low-priced range


    20. The definition of “low-priced” must, of course, be somewhat arbitary

    21. 1 The study was devoted to the period 1926–19352 and revealed a continuous superiority of diversified, low-priced issues over diversified, high-priced issues as speculative media


    22. Some Reasons Why Most Buyers of Low-priced Issues Lose Money


    23. Yet it is undoubtedly true that most people who buy low-priced stocks lose money on their purchases


    24. In consequence the bulk of the low-priced purchases made by the public are of the wrong kind; i


    25. The reason may be either because the companies are in bad financial condition or because the common stock is low-priced in appearance only and actually represents a full or excessive commitment in relation to the size of the enterprise


    26. The latter is preponderantly true of new security offerings in the low-priced range


    27. A genuinely low-priced common stock will show an aggregate value for the issue which is small in relation to the company’s assets, sales and past or prospective profits


    28. The Wright-Hargreaves issue was low-priced in appearance only, for in fact the price registered a very high valuation for the company as compared with all parts of its financial exhibit


    29. (Note also that the same statement could be applied to Barker Brothers Preferred, which at its quotation of 18 partook of the qualities of a low-priced common stock


    30. But where a low-priced stock fulfills our conditions of speculative attractiveness, there is apt to be no pressure to sell and no effort to create buying

    31. This analysis may explain why the public almost always buys the wrong low-priced issues and ignores the really promising opportunities in this field


    32. Between 1924 and 1926 we note the characteristic market swings of a low-priced “secondary” common-stock issue


    33. by buyers of low-priced common stocks, 521–523


    34. Low-priced bonds, limitation of profit on, 323–324


    35. A similar remark applies to low-priced bonds, such as those mentioned in the table on p


    36. 473–474 of the 1934 edition of this work for reference to an earlier study devoted to the relative behavior of low-priced and high-priced issues when purchased at or near the bottoms of depressions in 1897, 1907, 1914 and 1921


    37. Whereas the leading stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average had advanced only 40% from the end of 1938 to the 1946 high, Standard & Poor’s index of low-priced stocks had shot up no less than 280% in the same period


    38. Third, a bull market is ordinarily most generous to low-priced issues; thus it tends to raise the typical bargain issue to at least a reasonable level


    39. The costs of trading low-priced stocks can be very high


    40. In that period, when Barron's published annually a list of 30 low-priced stocks, Heilbrunn and Graham would examine the companies on the list and buy the 10 best as a basket

    41. Another example of using a less-obvious pocket pivot buy point in a smaller stock is seen in Jazz Pharmaceuticals (JAZZ), a thin, low-priced stock with a strong fundamental picture given its strong pipeline of new and existing products at the time


    42. Hal had his eye on a low-priced stock that he could get for only $7 per share


    43. In reality, the key distinction seems to be that most investors exhibit wealth-dependent risk aversion (which would discourage them from buying more risky assets in bad times when time-varying risk premia are elevated) whereas long-horizon investors may have more stable risk preferences over time (and would derive utility gains from buying low-priced risky assets in bad times)


    44. However, most investors should shy away from low-priced warrants


    45. As a result, with low-priced stocks, you tend to have much more ground to make up from your initial buy point just to break even and overcome the spread


    46. That confuses people who prefer a bargain—the low-priced, unknown stocks they hope will take off and surprise us all


    47. with low-priced stocks, 305


    48. Not because you prefer to own that position, but because it would be easier to manage the least important portion of the trade – namely what to do with the low-priced call spread after you sold the put spread (at a high enough price to generate a profit)


    49. Especially when you are so concerned with managing the very low-priced position (the residual call calendar spread) that can be held or sold without having much influence over the eventual profitability of the double calendar trade


    50. Dell innovated supply chain efficiency and sold low-priced computers to the consumers; they called it “Made to order


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    Synonyms for "low-priced"

    cheap inexpensive competitive bargain budget economical